Activism against bandwidth caps and monopolistic behavior.

AT&T lowers GoPhone data pricing to $500/GB

One thing that hasn’t been touched on is how much data costs for AT&T customers not on a postpaid plan/contract. As it turns out, data pricing for GoPhone users used to be $5000 per gigabyte:

AT&T announced today that it was cutting the price of data access for prepaid customers — those who don’t sign contracts but instead pay as they go — to $5 for 10MB of data access on select smartphones, a major cut from the previous $5 for 1MB. But press reports haven’t done their math: The costs are 50 times what so-called postpaid customers — those who sign a contract and get a bill each month — are charged. An AT&T GoPhone customer pays $500 per gigabyte of data usage, whereas a postpaid Android or iPhone user pays $10 per gigabyte.

But the other carriers have atrocious data pricing, right? Not quite:

Even pay-as-you-go iPad users pay $10 per gigabyte, so the shocking price difference can’t be attributed to the prepaid business model’s costs versus the postpaid model’s costs. After all, AT&T, Verizon Wireless, and Sprint have 3G data pricing that’s all over the map for the same amount of data, even with each carrier’s suite of plans. The differences just aren’t as scandalous as these GoPhone charges.

Three words: Jesus Christ, AT&T.

(As a note, I’m out of town this week on business, so normal posting will resume on Monday.)